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Speech delivered at High-Level
Meeting on AIDS, UN General Assembly
Making the Response to AIDS Work for Young Women and Girls
Inés Alberdi, Executive Director, UNIFEM
June 11, 2008 – (UNIFEM) Madame Chair, Distinguished
Delegates, Fellow Panellists, Colleagues and Friends,
I am pleased and honoured to be invited to address this panel on
Making the Response to AIDS Work for Women and Girls.
I am particularly honoured to be speaking on behalf of the United
Nations. Reducing the vulnerability of women and girls to HIV and
its impact is a collaborative effort — between governments,
civil society and the UN system. In particular, UNIFEM, UNFPA, UNICEF,
WHO, UNDP and UNAIDS, as partners in the Global Coalition on Women
and AIDS, are jointly advocating for increased commitment and sustained
financial support for all of the concerns that we are addressing
today.
The selection of this issue at this High-Level Meeting on AIDS is
an indication of the enormous progress that has been made in calling
attention to the gender dimensions of this pandemic since the 2001
groundbreaking Declaration of Commitment on HIV/AIDS. In 2001 and
again in 2006, Member States pledged to implement measures to increase
the capacity of women and adolescent girls to protect themselves
from the risk of HIV infection.
Because HIV is most often transmitted sexually, unequal relationships
between men and women together with gender stereotypes fuel its
spread.
It is therefore vital, as the Secretary-General’s Report for
this meeting concludes, that Governments incorporate massive political
and social mobilization to address gender inequality and sexual
norms within their national responses to HIV. Programmes must be
grounded in a commitment to the protection of the human rights of
girls and women, must seek to empower them to protect themselves
from infection, and must meaningfully engage men as partners in
the effort.
Today, I will focus on one part of this challenge: making the response
to AIDS work for young women and girls.
According to the most recent UNICEF report, in 2007, some 5.4 million
young people were living with HIV (aged 15-24 years), of whom 3.1
million, or 57 percent, were female. However, 40 percent of young
men and 36 percent of young women had accurate knowledge of HIV,
still well below the 95 percent needed to meet the target for 2010.
What makes this so critical is the fact that in many countries of
the world, adolescent girls are at a particularly high risk of HIV.
Their right to make choices, including if, when and with whom to
marry, are frequently denied. They are also subject to high levels
of sexual and gender-based violence, in conflict and non-conflict
situations, which also increases their likelihood of infection.
Young men and boys are part of the solution. For this to happen
we must have a supportive enabling environment that includes interventions
to increase protective factors linked to social, economic and cultural
drivers of the epidemic — among them, the support and awareness
of young men and boys. Actions to transform gender relations must
be fully part of HIV and AIDS programming to empower women and girls,
and promote new attitudes and behaviours among men and boys that
support gender equality.
So, what can be done to overcome the barriers to universal access
to HIV prevention services faced by young women and girls? What
can be done to translate information into knowledge, and knowledge
into behaviour change?
The list of actions needed is long. Today I will highlight three:
First, we need to empower young women to know and exercise their
rights — to education, health services, economic opportunities,
and freedom from violence. Our years of work on this issue, with
UN partners, has shown the importance of making sure that girls
can enroll in and remain in school, where they acquire vital life
skills and increased awareness of their rights. Towards this end,
it is important also to support programmes to eliminate school fees,
to promote health systems that effectively care for those needing
care, so that girls are not forced to leave school to shoulder this
burden, and to devise effective approaches for making schools safe
for young women and girls.
Second, we need to find ways to engage men and boys in combating
gender-biased stereotypes and behaviours that fuel this pandemic,
starting in the home. Action is needed to promote male behavior
that is based on respect for women’s rights, responsibility,
and that is non-violent and non-abusive.
Third, it is vitally important to address the links between HIV
and AIDS and violence against women and girls. Violence is both
a cause and a consequence of HIV among women of all ages, but especially
young women and girls. Violence or the threat of violence may make
it difficult or impossible for them to abstain from sex or use a
condom; it may also discourage them from getting tested or disclosing
their HIV status, thereby preventing them from receiving treatment
and counseling.
UNIFEM, UNFPA and WHO continue to collaborate to eliminate gender
based violence. Supporting national efforts cannot be emphasized
enough. Two years ago, at the high level meeting panel on feminization
of the epidemic, the Honourable Nilcéa Freire, Minister of
Women's Affairs, Brazil, pledged to carry out the consensus recommendations
in her country. As a result of her vision, the Integrated Plan to
Combat the Feminization of the AIDS Epidemic and other STDs was
launched. The plan clearly recognizes the role that domestic and
sexual violence against women and girls plays in fueling the epidemic.
In addition, the United Nations Trust Fund to End Violence against
Women is funding a first-ever global learning initiative on how
to address the linkages between violence against women and HIV and
AIDS, with leading experts supporting process.
Finally, it is important to take action to ensure that resources
for programmes to address gender equality and HIV are increased
dramatically. We are pleased that Round 8 of the Global Fund on
HIV/AIDS, Malaria and Tuberculosis is encouraging proposals that
address gender issues. In a panel that UNIFEM co-sponsored with
the Global Coalition on Women and AIDS, the World YWCA, Action Aid
and Church World Services on Monday — which focused on increasing
financing for gender equality and HIV/AIDS — panellists called
for more funds and greater attention to the women’s rights
dimensions of the pandemic. Robert Carr, a Caribbean academic whose
work focuses on gender and HIV and AIDS pointed out that when addressing
women’s vulnerability is included in National HIV and AIDS
plans, it is usually limited to three areas: Prevention of mother
to child transmission; Sex workers; Discouraging girls from being
sexually active. While these may be important, he points out that
the consistent focus on just these three aspects obscures the complexity
of men’s and women’s lives and the choices that they
have to make.
Strategies for HIV prevention, treatment, and support services for
women and girls must be incorporated into all national AIDS plans
and budgets, and these are made central to all National Development
Strategies. But as Elizabeth Mataka, the Secretary-General’s
Special Envoy on HIV/AIDS in Africa, said in our panel, in addition
to more money, we need to use those funds to be bold and challenge
the cultures and norms that generate behaviours like violence against
women.
From:http://www.unifem.org/news_events/story_detail.php?StoryID=692
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